An Alice in Wonderland story

A stone slab in the chancel of St Leonard’s Church in Walton-le-Dale links the lords of the manor of that village with Skeffington Road in Preston and the author of Alice in Wonderland. The slab bears the simple inscription:

‘Skeffn. Hoghton Esqre
Died Feby 8th 1768,
aged 80’

It marks the grave of Skeffington Hoghton, one of the ten children of Charles Hoghton, the 4th baronet, whose estate included Hoghton Tower and Walton Hall, and who in 1676 married Mary Skeffington, daughter of John Skeffington, 2nd Viscount Massereene. The name Skeffington was adopted for the first name of one of their sons, and subsequently for other relatives of the Hoghtons.

Skeffington Hoghton slab in St Leonard's Walton-le-Dale

Lucy Hoghton, another of the children of Charles and Mary, married a Thomas Lutwidge, a tobacco merchant trading from the port of Whitehaven, at St Bees in Cumberland in 1721. The couple had two children: one named Henry and another named Skeffington (see below).

Lewis Carroll
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a.k.a. Lewis Carroll

Henry married Jane Molyneux, the daughter of Rigby Molyneux of Preston, at Walton-le-Dale in 1767. The couple, who were living at Cooper Hill in Walton-le-Dale from 1778, had two children: Charles and another Skeffington. In 1798, Charles married Elizabeth Dodgson the older sister of Charles Dodgson. Their daughter, Frances Jane, married her cousin Charles Dodgson junior in 1827 and their first son Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice in Wonderland, was born in 1832

OpenStreet map showing the extent of the Lutwidge estate and the family names they used to name streets and buildings

The Preston Lutwidges owned a lot of property in the town, including the Peel Hall estate, which they developed in the nineteenth century. They gave their name to Lutwidge Street, the Lutwidge Arms and Lutwidge Mill. They used the Skeffington name for Skeffington Road and the Skeffington Arms, and another family name for Fletcher Road.

Admiral Skeffington Lutwidge (1737-1814).*watercolour on ivory.*6.5 cm high

The most famous bearer of the Skeffington Christian name was Admiral Skeffington Lutwidge, the younger son of Thomas and Lucy Lutwidge, mentioned above.

Admiral Lutwidge had a distinguished naval career, including commanding one of the vessels that engaged in a lengthy exploration of the Arctic in 1773. One of his midshipmen on that voyage was a young Horatio Nelson, and it was while the expedition vessels were trapped in the ice that Nelson was reportedly chased by a polar bear. Another version has Nelson chasing the bear.

Admiral Lutwidge’s nephew Charles, Lewis Carroll’s grandfather, served with his uncle at the siege of Toulon in 1793.

The Skeffington Arms was probably named after the admiral, which means that the pub’s sign depicting a soldier celebrates the wrong arm of the services. That sign was taken down when the building, which had been converted to apartments, was being refurbished. It has not been replaced.


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